Build weekly watering plans using area, soil type, and sun exposure easily. Convert inches to minutes with sprinkler rate, efficiency, and rain credits included.
| Area | Weekly Target | Days/Week | App Rate | Efficiency | Runtime/Day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,000 ft² | 1.00 in/week | 3 | 0.50 in/hr | 70% | 57 min |
| 2,500 ft² | 0.80 in/week | 4 | 0.60 in/hr | 75% | 27 min |
| 750 m² | 25 mm/week | 3 | 12 mm/hr | 70% | 89 min |
Examples are illustrative and should be verified with site measurements.
Watering plans affect plant establishment, turf health, dust control, and client satisfaction. In construction and landscape delivery, consistent scheduling reduces callbacks, prevents stress during hot periods, and supports predictable maintenance. A calculator converts field inputs into run times for crews.
A simple approach starts with a weekly depth target, then divides it across watering days. For turf, many plans begin near one inch per week, but the best target depends on soil texture, rooting depth, and season. Increasing days per week shortens each run and can improve infiltration on slopes or compacted subgrade.
The ET method estimates water need from reference evapotranspiration and adjustment factors. Reference ET represents atmospheric drying demand. Plant factor reflects crop type and maturity, while microclimate factor accounts for wind, shade, and heat near pavement. This method is useful where ET data is available and conditions change weekly.
Not all rainfall becomes usable soil moisture. Runoff, interception, and evaporation reduce benefit. Applying an effective rain credit prevents overwatering after storms. In practice, crews often credit only part of reported rainfall.
Depth alone does not create a schedule; the system’s application rate matters. Application rate (in/hr or mm/hr) describes how quickly sprinklers apply water. Dividing required depth by application rate and irrigation efficiency yields runtime. Measuring application rate with catch cans improves accuracy.
Irrigation efficiency captures overspray, wind drift, poor overlap, and leaks. Lower efficiency increases required minutes for the same net soil moisture. Improving nozzle selection, pressure regulation, and head spacing can reduce runtime and water use. Documenting assumptions supports clear client reporting.
Runoff occurs when application exceeds infiltration capacity. Cycle-and-soak breaks a long runtime into smaller cycles with soak periods between them, allowing water to infiltrate. This strategy is particularly valuable on slopes, clay soils, and freshly graded areas. The calculator estimates cycle count and minutes per cycle from your limits.
Choose watering days that match site access and local restrictions, then start early morning to reduce evaporation and wind. Keep a consistent pattern and adjust seasonally. Exporting results to CSV or PDF supports approvals, turnover packages, and ongoing maintenance logs for each zone.
Use the simple method when you have a known weekly depth target. Use the ET method when you can access local ET data and want schedules that adjust to weather and microclimate.
Many spray systems perform around 60–75% in real conditions. Start near 70% and refine after checking head spacing, wind exposure, and distribution uniformity using catch-can measurements.
Place identical cups across the zone, run irrigation for a set time, then average the collected depth. Convert to an hourly rate. This field test is more reliable than nozzle assumptions.
If soils cannot absorb water fast enough, long runs cause runoff. Cycle-and-soak uses shorter cycles with breaks to improve infiltration, especially on slopes, clay soils, and compacted areas.
Effective rainfall is the portion of rain that becomes usable soil moisture. Some water runs off or evaporates. Crediting only effective rain helps avoid overwatering after storms.
Early morning usually has lower wind and cooler temperatures, reducing evaporation and drift. It also avoids late-day leaf wetness that can contribute to disease on some plantings.
Yes. Calculate each zone separately because area, application rate, and sun exposure often differ. Save each zone’s results as CSV or PDF to keep clear maintenance and turnover records.
Create smarter watering schedules and protect your landscape today.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.